Payment of account & dealing charges

Your account admin fee (and postal statements & contract notes fee if chosen) will be collected from your account on the 26th of each month, or the next business day. If you’ve chosen our frequent dealing option, the first payment will be collected from your account when opened and quarterly thereafter. Dealing commission, regular investing fees and other fees will be taken from your account as part of each transaction.

What interest will be paid on cash?

Gross interest on any cash you hold will be credited to your account quarterly at the Bank of Scotland base rate, minus 3.5% (min. 0%). We may retain the difference between the interest paid to you and the interest we are able to earn, as permitted by The Financial Conduct Authority.

Why invest with us?

Safe & secure

As one of the UK’s leading stockbrokers, we are authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA).

Tips and tools

Our comprehensive range of investment tips and tools make it easy to choose and manage your investments.

Award-winning

Thinking about transferring to us?

Some brokers charge % based account fees

With some brokers, the more you invest and the larger your investments grow, the bigger your fees grow too. Here at The Share Centre, we do things differently. Regardless of how much you invest, you will be charged our fixed, monthly fee of £4.80 for a Self-select Stocks & Shares ISA.

All prices are correct as of 26.02.18 - based on percentage fees advertised on the respective company websites.*Fee calculated when only holding funds in your ISA. When only holding shares in a Hargreaves Lansdown ISA their fee is capped at £45 PA.**based on Nutmeg's unmanaged Fixed allocation portfolios.

Please remember

This website can help you make informed investment decisions, not give personalised advice. If in doubt, please seek independent financial advice. Past performance is not an indicator of future performance and since investments can fluctuate in value, you may get back less than you pay in. Tax allowances and the benefits of tax-efficient accounts could change in the future.